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Black Owned Bookstores Are Making a Comeback

If you happen to be looking for a black-owned bookstore to do some holiday shopping this year, there’s some good news. Black-owned bookstores are making a recovery around the country.

From a peak of 324 black-owned bookstores in 1999, the number fell to 54 by 2014. But as the 2018 holiday season comes around there are 110 black-owned bookstores, according to the African American Literature Book Club’s listing.

“Last year was the first year I added more stores to the list than I took away,” said Troy Johnson, who runs the book club, according to an April story in Publisher’s Weekly.

In Lexington, Kentucky, the news is especially sweet for Wild Fig Books & Coffee, which was headed for closure until a grassroots campaign raised $35,000 to save it, WUKY Kentucky Public Radio reported. The bookstore will now be converted into a worker-owned cooperative as well, according to the station.

At least one new Wild Fig worker-owner believes that the diversity of the bookstore’s existing patrons show that minority-owned or worker-owned bookstores can attract a diverse customer base.

“We have so many people of a diverse background that are involved, setting that example that you don’t have to be somewhere where the population of people of color is extremely high to have something like this that is successful,” said Wild Fig worker-owner April Taylor, according to WUKY.